Zuma's reply to Nkandla report sufficient - Sizani

Johannesburg - ANC Chief Whip Stone Sizani on Monday said
he was satisfied that President Jacob Zuma had responded to all reports on
security upgrades to his Nkandla home, including the public protector's.

"In responding to Parliament on this matter, it was
important and appropriate that the president takes into account not only one
but all the applicable reports produced thus far... to assist Parliament to
sufficiently process the matter," Sizani said in a statement.

"It would have been amiss for the president to
confine himself to a single report at the expense of the rest."

On Friday, Public Protector Thuli Madonsela's office said
Zuma had not yet responded to her report on the R246m security upgrades at his
private Nkandla homestead in KwaZulu-Natal.

Her office said the response, handed to National Assembly
Speaker Baleka Mbete by Zuma last week, did not respond to Madonsela's report.

"In fact, in the document it says this is not a
comment on the public protector's report," spokeswoman Kgalalelo Masibi
said in an e-mail to Sapa at the time.

"That means a document that comments on the public
protector's report or indicates action taken or to be taken to implement
remedial action in compliance with section 3(5) of the Executive Members Ethics
Act must still be submitted to Parliament by the president."

On Saturday, the presidency said Zuma was taking all
reports into account. Spokesperson Mac Maharaj said the president's response to
the National Assembly took the joint standing committee on intelligence report,
the public protector's report titled "Secure in Comfort", and the
Special Investigating Unit (SIU) report into account.

Sizani said the parliamentary process that dealt with the
relevant reports should be allowed to take its course.

"We are confident that, in processing the matter,
the opinions of various role players, including those of the public protector,
would be formally sought by Parliament. This process should, therefore, be
respected," he said.

Earlier this year, Madonsela found Zuma and his family
unduly benefited from the upgrades and recommended that he repay some of the
money.

Zuma declined to respond to Madonsela's report in full
within the required fortnight and said instead he would wait for the SIU's
findings.

Public spending on security upgrades at his Nkandla
homestead have turned into one of the major controversies of the Zuma
presidency, as costs escalated to R246m. It emerged the project included a pool
(dubbed a firepool by government), an amphitheatre, and a chicken run.